A screen for cleaning a pulp suspension includes a stationary installation in the infeed area between the infeed branch and the free end of the rotor.
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1. screen for cleaning a pulp suspension comprising:
an infeed branch having an axis; a rotatable rotor having a driven end and a free end; and a stationary installation disposed within an infeed area between the infeed branch and the free end of the rotor, the installation having a surface; wherein the axis of the infeed branch is substantially parallel to the surface of the installation.
2. screen for cleaning a pulp suspension comprising:
an infeed branch; a rotatable rotor having a driven end and a free end; a stationary, spiral-shaped installation disposed within an infeed area between the infeed branch and the free end of the rotor; and a screen basket disposed intermediate the installation and the rotor; wherein the spiral-shape has a pitch selected such that the flow speed in the infeed area is kept constant over the entire screen basket.
3. screen for cleaning a pulp suspension comprising:
an infeed branch defining an inlet diameter; a rotatable rotor having a driven end and a free end; a stationary installation disposed within an infeed area between the infeed branch and the free end of the rotor, the installation having a surface and defining a height; and a screen disposed intermediate the installation and the rotor; wherein the infeed branch is adapted for directing the pulp suspension over substantially the full height of the surface of the installation and the installation is adapted for redirecting the pulp suspension evenly onto the screen.
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This invention relates generally to apparatus for cleaning pulp suspensions. More particularly, the present invention relates to screens for cleaning pulp suspensions.
Screens are machines used in the paper industry for the purpose of cleaning a pulp suspension consisting of water, fibers and dirt particles. In doing so, a feed flow is led over a screening device, with the accept stream consisting of water and fibers through the screen. A partial stream, called the reject stream, consisting of water, fibers and dirt particles, is generally withdrawn from the end located opposite the feed end. Generally speaking, such a screen is designed rotationally symmetrically and consists of a casing with a tangentially arranged infeed, a cylindrical screen basket, mostly with holes or vertical slots, and a revolving rotor. The rotor has the task of keeping the screen slots clear, and this is achieved by blades which rotate just below the screen surface. The accept stream is collected in an accept chamber, often one of a conical design, and extracted radially at some point. The reject stream is generally led to the end of the screen basket opposite the infeed into a reject chamber, which is in most cases annular, and extracted from the chamber tangentially. Such a screen is known for instance from U.S. Pat. No. 4,268,381. The disadvantage of these screening machines consists in the risk of clogging at low flow rates occurring in the relatively large reject chamber. Also, non-uniform inflow into the screen basket and non-uniform flow conditions in the accept chamber, especially in the area of the accept discharge, occur,
The purpose of the invention is, therefore, to create an improvement of the flow conditions in the screen in order to decrease the energy used at increased production rate and dirt removal.
The invention is therefore characterized by a stationary installation, which may be designed rotationally symmetrically, being provided in the infeed area between the tube branch and the end of the rotor. This gives a substantial improvement of the flow conditions and as a consequence, a reduction of the amount of energy used.
An advantageous advancement of the invention is characterized by the installation being a cone, a truncated cone, a hemisphere, a spherical segment, spheric segment between two parallel circles, a paraboloid, or a hyperboloid of two sheets.
A favorable variant of the invention is characterized by the cone angle a amounting to between 10°C and 60°C for installations designed as a cone or truncated cone.
A favorable advancement of the invention is characterized by the axis of the infeed branch being arranged in parallel to the cone shell. This allows better routing of the flow and further reduction of the energy losses.
A favorable, alternative variant of the invention is characterized by the installation being a spiral-shaped body, with the pitch of the spiral being selectable such that the flow speed in the infeed area is kept constant over the entire screen basket width.
An advantageous advancement of the invention is characterized by the installation being arranged centrally.
An advantageous variant of the invention is characterized by the accept chamber being designed double-conically.
An advantageous advancement of the invention is characterized by the screen being designed as double machine.
A favorable advancement of the invention is characterized by the infeed taking place axially through the rotor.
A favorable variant of the invention is characterized by the drive-side rotor part being of the same height as or higher than the rotor part on the other side of the drive into which and through which the pulp flows.
A favorable variant of the invention is characterized by the infeed taking place centrally from the side.
An advantageous advancement of the invention is characterized by two accept discharges being provided.
An advantageous variant of the invention is characterized by the screen being arranged horizontally.
A favorable advancement of the invention is characterized by a screen basket for preliminary screening, which turns together with the rotor, being provided in the infeed area, with rotating blades possibly being provided in the preliminary screening area.
A favorable advancement of the invention is characterized by the rotor having several blades arranged at different heights and/or distributed over the circumference.
The present invention may be better understood and its numerous objects and advantages will become apparent to those skilled in the art by reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
For this, the rotor 4 of the screen 1 is designed for uniform screen inflow, which necessitates lower thickening behavior along the screen plate height. It is shaped as a parabola, and this means that the axial flow rate inside the screen basket remains constant at an assumed uniform outflow through the screen plate. As an alternative, the shape of the rotor may be approached through a conical shape.
To ensure suitable discharge of the reject flow, the reject chamber is designed such that flow rates above 2.5 m/sec. with or without additional introduction of agitating energy by the rotor are achieved. This virtually avoids clogging.
The embodiment shown in
The specifically heavy parts are thereby centrifuged outside. This allows to achieve longer useful life for the screen baskets In the pre-screening area, and on the other hand also to have a planned barrier in the form of the pre-screening basket as a consistent impediment for the heavy parts to pass into the centrifugal post-screening area. This means that the rotors, for the fact that they rotate in the first-stage accepts, are being loaded longer at the onflow edges and are therefore subject to lesser abrasion and energy consumption and can therefore be adjusted more closely to the surface of screen plate 5, without triggering damage to the rotor or screen plate surface. The separation of coarse and minor contaminants results in increased performance (throughput and effectiveness increase) in comparison to conventional screening machines. This variant can also be designed with a double-cone rotor for high production rates.
While preferred embodiments have been shown and described, various modifications and substitutions may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the present invention has been described by way of illustration and not limitation.
Gabl, Helmuth, Pichler, Axel, Gscheider, Alexander
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4268381, | May 03 1979 | UNIWELD INC | Rotary pulp screening device of the vertical pressure type |
5061370, | Mar 20 1990 | Beloit Technologies, Inc | Screening device for slurries with improved rotor and hub design |
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Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Feb 02 2001 | Andritz AG | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Apr 17 2001 | GABL, HELMUTH | Andritz AG | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 011794 | /0527 | |
Apr 17 2001 | PICHLER, AXEL | Andritz AG | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 011794 | /0527 | |
Apr 18 2001 | GSCHEIDER, ALEXANDER | Andritz AG | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 011794 | /0527 |
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